Young Sherlock Holmes

Young Sherlock Holmes

1985 "Before a lifetime of adventure, they lived the adventure of a lifetime."
Young Sherlock Holmes
Young Sherlock Holmes

Young Sherlock Holmes

6.8 | 1h49m | PG-13 | en | Adventure

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson meet as boys in an English Boarding school. Holmes is known for his deductive ability even as a youth, amazing his classmates with his abilities. When they discover a plot to murder a series of British business men by an Egyptian cult, they move to stop it.

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6.8 | 1h49m | PG-13 | en | Adventure , Mystery | More Info
Released: December. 04,1985 | Released Producted By: Paramount , Amblin Entertainment Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson meet as boys in an English Boarding school. Holmes is known for his deductive ability even as a youth, amazing his classmates with his abilities. When they discover a plot to murder a series of British business men by an Egyptian cult, they move to stop it.

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Cast

Nicholas Rowe , Alan Cox , Sophie Ward

Director

Michael Ploog

Producted By

Paramount , Amblin Entertainment

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Reviews

TheLittleSongbird Am a huge fan of Sherlock Holmes and get a lot of enjoyment out of Arthur Conan Doyle's stories. Also love Basil Rathbone's and especially Jeremy Brett's interpretations to death. So would naturally see any Sherlock Holmes adaptation that comes my way, regardless of its reception.Moreover, interest in seeing early films based on Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories and wanting to see as many adaptations of any Sherlock Holmes stories as possible sparked my interest in seeing 'Young Sherlock Holmes'. Thought that with such great talent on board in front of and behind the camera that it couldn't fail.Fail 'Young Sherlock Holmes' does not. It is not perfect and is not quite great, but it is hugely entertaining and hard to dislike. It is not one of the all-time Holmes adaptations or one of the worst (nothing's worse than Peter Cook's/Dudley Moore's 'The Hound of the Baskervilles'), and of the Sherlock Holmes films seen recently it is along with 'The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes' the best. It may not be Conan Doyle, and how Holmes and Watson meet here is contradictory to 'A Study in Scarlet', but as a standalone it delivers on the entertainment value.'Young Sherlock Holmes' can get pretty silly at times, with the last act being over-the-top nonsense and in a way that is not in keeping with the rest of the story, which took a fun and light-hearted approach often but never to extremes. There are times where it does feel like it was trying to do too much.Also found a few cast members to be on the hammy side, Freddie Jones goes overboard a bit. Otherwise there is not an awful lot to dislike about 'Young Sherlock Holmes'. It still holds up as a great looking film, it is beautifully and atmospherically shot but the stars are the set design for Baker Street and the imaginative special effects (the knight is a standout). The direction is efficient and at ease with the material on the most part. Bruce Broughton's music score is like a character of its own and adds so much character to the film. The writing is playful and witty while also intelligent and thought-provoking. The story throughout goes at a lively pace and is so much fun to watch, with a mystery that intrigues hugely. There are even some wonderfully strange moments, Watson's hallucination is one of the most bizarre on film but it's great fun to watch and imaginatively handled.Nicholas Rowe displays much charisma as Holmes, with even in youth shades of the detective's iconic character traits. Alan Cox is a loyal and amusing Watson and the chemistry between them is charming. Sophie Ward exudes charm and class and Anthony Higgins has a whale of a time. In summary, not great or perfect but a huge amount of fun. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Blueghost If Indiana Jones met Sherlock Holmes, this is the movie you'd get. There's shades of Spielberg's and Lucas's "Temple of Doom" movie in here, and the film has that Spielberg gloss.There isn't too much sleuthing here so much as old fashioned adventure, but it's a decent Victorian era yarn all the same. You get the sense that Basil Rawthbone would grin if he were alive to see this, as well as mister Doyle--author of all.I seem to recall that this wasn't as big a splash as it might've been when it hit the theatres, but having seen it after all these years I think it holds up.A good action-adventure Sherlock Holmes style. Check it out.
ElMaruecan82 And that's the answer to the question :"What have I gotten myself into?" This is a sublime exchange and even more when you know it's between a young Watson and the titular "Young Sherlock Holmes". I never forgot these lines ever since I saw the film with my Dad on a Sunday night when I was 10. These lines encapsulates everything Spielberg movies are about. Yes, the director is Barry Levinson but Steven Spielberg was the only name that could ring a bell for me at that time, as it was popping out in the credits of every movie that targeted my age-group, "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", "Back to the Future" or "The Goonies". His name carried great premises of adventures, special effects, and kids trapped in extraordinary situations… adventures of a lifetime indeed.But it was the French version I saw and the tile was "The Secret of the Pyramid", so it's not until John Watson (Alan Cox) and Sherlock Holmes (Nicholas Rowe) met that I realized the film would also feature a duo I was very familiar with. Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are among these myths it is impossible to overlook as a kid, or at least at that time, I grew up with the Manga dog-themed cartoon of "Sherlock Holmes" and the cliché of the detective wearing the Holmes' hat, carrying the magnifying glass was printed in my mind, not to mention the "elementary" line. So I didn't expect the film to be about Holmes but his presence was the icing on the cake and made the story twice more captivating.But time has a strange effect and while I loved the adventure and the mystery behind these hallucination-driven murders, now, I wish there was more of the typical Holmes and Watson relationship and mystery-solving. The memorable introduction of Holmes and Watson in the college, the great dialogues involving riddles, and the magic art of deduction and a mentor-master relationship made of fascination and admiration, matched the original books' spirit, and making Watson a chubby teenager admiring the slender, intuitive prodigy is the stuff gutsy screenplays are made of, but then with all the special effects and the supernatural elements, the film ventures into familiar territories, with thrilling sequences tailor-made for the 80's, and sometimes ahead of their time.The film is pretty creative when it comes to the murders sequences and the hallucinations make an efficient precocious use of computer imagery, especially with that knight coming out the stained glass, and these scary and nightmarish gargoyles or pheasants, and we also have investigation leading to a mysterious sect whose setting and penetrating chants remind of the Temple of Doom just like a flight sequence near Big Ben is an obvious homage to "E.T". This is Steven Spielberg at the pinnacle his career, but then the film teeters on the brink of the supernatural adventure genre than keeping solidly rooted to its mystery basis, which could have been acceptable if it didn't have to be at the expenses of realism and common sense. And I'm not even talking of the dreadful pastry sequences that definitely belonged to another movie. My problem was with the characterization.Watson might not be as bright as Holmes but I couldn't buy that after a series of strange deadly incidents, he couldn't trust Holmes' intuition. Near the end, they are looking for a way to save his love interest Elizabeth (Sophie Ward), and Holmes' idea is to make a diversion, wasn't it the most obvious thing to do? The question should have been: how can I make a diversion? The film features so many brilliant parts, that some are harder to accept. For instance, when one of the suspects says an insect has just bitten him, why didn't they guess it was the effect of the poisoned dart? These bits of lazy writing, I suspect, are due to the difficulty of swinging back and forth between the requirements of the adventure genre and yet keeping the characterization consistent.Still, Chris Columbus manages to maintain our interest on the duo and the story serves their friendship, never the opposite. The acting helps and it comes to the point even the romantic subplot never feels forced and adds a new dimension to Sherlock Holmes. But this is a project that had so much to offer that its choice to play on the safe side canceled its chances for posterity and it's not surprising that it isn't celebrated like "The Goonies" or "Back to the Future", it is an underrated gem to the best, but the "adventure of a lifetime" deserved better, maybe they should have stuck to their guns and keep it an adventure of Sherlock Holmes and who knows what good could have been brought. Or maybe it was just… too ahead of its time and had the same film been released today, with all the special effects, CGI-craze and traditional myths' exploitation, it might have scored better. Still, Nicholas Rowe and Alan Cox are such great younger counterparts to their iconic characters that I wish they could have other adventures to share.But the film was indeed meant as a tender homage to the two icons rather than non-canon adventure. It opens with one disclaimer insisting that the film is not based on Arthur Conan Doyle's adventure but it feels the need to mention it again in the ending credits, as to make sure there would be no connection whatsoever between these two universes. I'm still glad they choose to end it with Sherlock wearing his trademark cloak, glass, hat and smoking pipe. Now, did Columbus make something different to mark a clearer distance from the book or did he take this artistic license in order to make something different, now, this is a riddle on the same vein than the egg or the chicken, and it'll take more than a Sherlock to solve it.
willhaskew This is a non-Walter Conan Doyle story about school-aged John Watson meeting Sherlock Holmes at Brompton Academy. He also meets Professor Rupert T. Waxlfatter, a brilliant retired schoolmaster and Holmes' mentor, who's the author of numerous books on chemistry and physics. But he is considered a little crazy due to his brazen experimentation attempts with a manned bicycle-like flying vehicle along with his inherent eccentricity. Waxflatter lives in an unused tower on school grounds, along with his niece and Holmes' sweetheart, Elizabeth Hardy. Holmes is also close to Professor Rathe, the Brompton fencing master. Several murders are committed in London using a powerful hallucinogenic delivered through a thorn shot by a cloaked assassin with a blowgun. Dudley, a school rival, frames Holmes for cheating on an exam and Waxflatter becomes one of the murder victims. Holmes secretly stays on the school's grounds in Waxflatter's old tower, getting help from Watson and Elizabeth to find Waxflatter's murderers. Their investigation leads to the uncovering of an Egyptian cult and an old grudge against Waxflatter and the other victims from a ruined business deal.This movie had the Spielberg-Amblin Entertainment magic and feeling of an exciting 1980's adventure that seems to have been lost. It featured some cutting edge visual effects created by Lucasfilm and a script by Chris Columbus. Some of the action and violence is a bit intense for a family film but it's nothing you wouldn't see in Indiana Jones.